This is almost certainly pre-ejaculate which is there to lubricate during sex. Some guys don't have it and some produce quite a lot. It's normal.
I'd rather arrive sooner than later. Their boat is scheduled to arrive sooner than ours. I'd like to take the same schooner as Mrs. Spooner because it will arrive sooner.
The idiomatic phrase "no sooner" is used with a verb and "than" in the context of "immediately thereafter." The word whenshould not be used.Example:No sooner had I called the police than the party completely dispersed.I had no sooner unpacked than the bellboy informed me that I had to change rooms.This stems from the more formal use, e.g, Your order will arrive no sooner than next week.
No semen used for your cows is artificial. It comes from a bull (since it is produced naturally by a bull), stored in semen straws and shipped to your farm to breed your cows with. The length of time it takes for semen to arrive depends on how far away the company you ordered it from is or where you're getting it from. The AI company you ordered the semen from would have a better answer to this question than anyone on this site ever could give you.
eve
No. It is 'The jester realised sooner than the rest of the court'.
sooner than a teenagerhe/she probably will not die
Since pH of semen is generally greater than 7, it is basic.
semen
Semen is white in color, It contains sperms. Urine is our pee, It is yellow or orange in color.. Semen is thicker than urine.. Semen is something like a fluid.
No sooner met but they looked, No sooner looked but they loved, No sooner loved but they sighed, No sooner sighed but they asked one another the reason, No sooner the reason but they sought the remedy, And in these degrees they made a pair of stairs to marriage. Shakespeare, As you Like it
These two phrases have overlapping meanings but are not exactly synonymous. No sooner ... than can generally be replaced by as soon as, but as soon as cannot always be replaced by no sooner ... than.No sooner is always followed by than and emphasises that one thing happened immediately after another. It is normally used in the past tense. For example:'No sooner had I finished my meal than the doorbell rang.''No sooner did it stop raining than I found my umbrella.'(Note that the subject/verb order in the no sooner ...clause must be reversed: 'had I finished', not 'I had finished'; 'did it stop', not 'it stopped'.)As soon as can be used instead, but it is less emphatic than no sooner ... than:'As soon as I had finished my meal, the doorbell rang.''As soon as it stopped raining, I found my umbrella.'As soon as can also be used with the present and future tenses, unlike no sooner ... than:'As soon as it stops raining, I'll go to the shops.''He will send you the book as soon as you send him the money.'
The word then can be a conjunction, and also an adverb (and hyphenated as an adjective).The word than is also a conjunction, used as a comparative. Arguably, it serves as a preposition where there the understood verb is missing. (He is taller than I, or He is taller than me)Confusion can occur in sentences using sooner...than (e.g. He had no sooner entered the house than a quarrel erupted). Sooner does not pair with then.